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Jefferson's Great Gamble: The Remarkable Story of Jefferson, Napoleon and the Men Behind the Louisiana Purchase
 
 
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Jefferson's Great Gamble: The Remarkable Story of Jefferson, Napoleon and the Men Behind the Louisiana Purchase [Hardcover]

Cerami (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 1, 2003
Jefferson’s Great Gamble tells the incredible story of how four leaders of an upstart nation--Jefferson, Madison, Monroe and Livingston--risked the future of their country and their own careers; outwitted Napoleon Bonaparte, the world’s most powerful ruler; and secured a new future for the United States of America.

For two years before the Louisiana Purchase, the nine principal players in the deal watched France and the United States approach the brink of war over the most coveted spot on the planet: a bustling port known as New Orleans. And until the breakthrough moment when a deal was secured, the men who steered their countries through the tense and often beguiling negotiations knew only that the futures of both nations were being questioned, and that the answer was uncertain.

Jefferson’s Great Gamble is an extraordinary work that redefines one of the most important and overlooked events in American history. Charles A. Cerami reveals the untold thrusts and parries of the Louisiana Purchase, an event that was not just a land sale, but thirty months of high drama, blandishment, posturing and secret maneuvers by some of the most powerful and crafty men of their time. Utilizing original correspondence and firsthand accounts, Cerami paints a vivid and engrossing narrative enriched by the words of the men whose talents and weaknesses kept the negotiations alive during the most unsure moments.

When Thomas Jefferson took office as president of the United States in 1801, Louisiana was at the front of his mind. Jefferson knew that the future of the country hinged on its right to navigate the Mississippi River and have access to New Orleans. His hopes for maintaining this right were almost completely dashed when it was discovered that Napoleon had secretly forced Spain to give the Louisiana Territory to France, and that he had troops on the way to take possession of New Orleans.

Jefferson’s only hope to stop the takeover lay in a great gamble: convincing Napoleon that the United States was willing to go to war over the port city. Jefferson knew that war might fracture the new country, which at the time had roughly one thousand men in its army. He was therefore faced with not only convincing Napoleon that the United States was ready to fight, but bluffing him into thinking that it could win that battle.

To execute his plan, Jefferson turned to his brilliant but troubled foreign-relations team. James Madison, the wily secretary of state, devised with Jefferson a disinformation strategy that was remarkable for its ingenuity and effectiveness. Robert Livingston, the American envoy to France, struggled to negotiate with French officials while being disdained and ignored by Jefferson and Madison, his political rivals. And as the final negotiations approached, James Monroe found himself sailing to Paris with the key to how the United States would execute the endgame.

Napoleon was bombarded by contradicting opinions from his two closest advisors. François de Barbé-Marbois, the impeccably honest finance minister, pushed toward a sale to raise money for a war with England. Charles-Maurice de Tallyrand-Périgord, Napoleon’s witty and corrupt chief advisor, pushed him to hold on to the colony, a position he believed held long-term benefits for France, if not for Napoleon.

To read Jefferson’s Great Gamble is to experience the tense days and nights leading to a decision that changed the face of the world. From the early American infighting to the heated French negotiations to the battle needed years later to secure the purchase, this new history is a story of dedicated men, each driven by love of country, who created an event that Robert Livingston called "the noblest work of our lives."


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this bicentennial year of the Louisiana Purchase, it's hard to imagine a more lively, shrewd and vivid narrative of the tangled events leading to it than this book. Compared to Roger Kennedy's zigzagging, unfocused Mr. Jefferson's Lost Cause, Cerami's book is notable for its readability and clarity. When he occasionally strays from his subject, he stumbles badly and shouldn't be taken as an authority on history in other times; nor is his tale based on the most recent, pertinent scholarship and available documents. But about the geopolitical and diplomatic circumstances of the purchase, Cerami (A Marshall Plan for the 1990s, etc.) is a master. His greatest achievement is to bring all of the characters involved-not only the well-known figures like Napoleon, Jefferson and James Monroe, but also the less famous but equally significant ones such as Robert Livingston, Louis-Andr‚ Pichon and Francois de Barb‚-Marbois-brilliantly to life. Cerami's book will not satisfy those looking to understand the larger significance of the sudden doubling of American territory-its implications for slavery, politics and the emergence of the U.S. as a continental and world power. But anyone wanting to read the story of a momentous turning point in American history, a story of diplomatic maneuvering and international politics, will be hard-pressed to find a better version than this. Illus.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Cerami does not shy away from offering vigorous opinions on the actions of the principals in the Louisiana Purchase. This propensity might jaundice professional historians, but Cerami's readers are not pros but peers: those who enjoy their history packaged as a fast-paced and muscular story. Cerami produces this effect by attending to the diplomatic instructions that Jefferson and Madison sent to Robert Livingston and James Monroe in Paris and likewise those of Napoleon to his ministers and legate in Washington, the otherwise obscure Louis-Andre Pichon. Cerami fairly revels in commenting about dispatches and audiences, giving Monroe laurels for closing the deal in 1803 but scoring Livingston for falsifying the record in an attempt to gain glory. History buffs will find satisfying new nuggets in Cerami's synthesis. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 328 pages
  • Publisher: Sourcebooks, Inc. (March 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1570719454
  • ISBN-13: 978-1570719455
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 5.9 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,425,236 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Uh, you forgot Napoleon, December 10, 2005
By 
David N. Thielen (Boulder, CO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jefferson's Great Gamble: The Remarkable Story of Jefferson, Napoleon and the Men Behind the Louisiana Purchase (Hardcover)
This is a very interesting subject and the book does cover quite a bit of what happened. But the final decision to sell was made by Napolean - and he is barely mentioned. It's like he is off in a side room and a couple of times one of the French negotiators would go talk to him off camera.

It also does not discuss much the context in America that lead to Jefferson being pushed to try to gain New Orleans and that also made him think it would be ok to buy all of Louisiana.

So, lots of interesting stuff, and it is well written. But a lot of the context is missing.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The book's weak narrative is its major flaw., June 15, 2004
By 
Scott Porch (Savannah, GA USA) - See all my reviews
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After recently finishing "Founding Brothers" by Joseph J. Ellis, which essentially covered various major events in post-revolutionary American history through the 1800 election of Thomas Jefferson to the presidency, I was interested in continuing my reading through the next several years of Jefferson's administration. The Louisiana Purchase was an obvious next step - and arguably the next event of any significance after Jefferson's election - in a reading of early American history.

I was disappointed by the narrative, though I think the subject matter was generally interesting. In the hands of a more accomplished author/historian, the story could have had the pop, the suspense and the intrigue of a historical novel. It didn't. Cerami's narrative was plodding and often dull. He backtracked and zig-zagged to provide context to his principal narrative to such an extent that there was no real "story" to follow.

There's so much history available to read and so much good scholarship from original source material that narrative skills separates the mediocre works from the great ones. I would put this book in the former category.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Easy read, but really a collection of bios, December 30, 2003
By 
Jonathon Lever (Green River, WY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jefferson's Great Gamble: The Remarkable Story of Jefferson, Napoleon and the Men Behind the Louisiana Purchase (Hardcover)
Cerami's book is an easy read. I read about three quarters of it in an hour and half. Unfortunately, when I bought it I was expecting the story of the Louisana purchase. True enough it was there, but you have to sort through the biographies of each of the characters. I am still not entirely certain how Talleyrand got to the position of foreign minister really impacted the purchase of the Louisana territory, but it was there.

The best part of the book was the last chapter. The story of Jackson's victory at New Orleans was interesting and probably the best piece of history included in the book, but unfortunately, it really came far too late in the read for me. Had there been more of this kind of history included, in terms of the writing style, the book probably would have kept me going with a greater degree of interest.

Finally, this is a small point for some, but the last part of the book includes a series of notes associated with each page. However, there isn't any reference on those pages as to what the note is dealing dealing with. You have no way of correlating the text with the notes included, which makes the explanatory notes all the more difficult to understand.

There was some positive to the book however, in addition to the last chapter. Cerami did include reference to the Treaty of San Ildefonso and to the circumstances that led to it being signed, which then leads us to have an understanding of how Napoleon got the territory. I include this as a positive because finding much information in the popular literature is difficult. It's too bad that Cerami didn't choose to focus on the similar aspects of the purchase to improve the overall historical nature of the book.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The new country was just a few years old when a wild, stomping rush toward the west gathered alarming speed and force in the 1790s. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
treasury minister
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New Orleans, United States, Jefferson's Great Gamble, First Consul, Louisiana Purchase, Saint Domingue, New York, Robert Livingston, James Monroe, James Madison, President Jefferson, State Department, Thomas Jefferson, Mississippi River, Pierre Samuel du Pont, Great Britain, Napoleon Bonaparte, Confusing Bonaparte, George Washington, Rufus King, John Adams, Napoleon's Odd Couple, West Florida, Agonizing Moments, Edward Livingston
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